Review: The Only Child by Andrew Pyper

I received this book for free from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review: The Only Child by Andrew PyperThe Only Child by Andrew Pyper
Also by this author: The Damned, The Residence
Published by Simon and Schuster on May 23, 2017
Genres: Fiction, Horror, Literary, Thrillers
Pages: 304
Format: eARC
Source: the publisher
Dr. Lilly Dominick, a forensic psychiatrist, has seen her fair share of unusual cases. During her career, she has been asked to evaluate some of the country's most dangerous psychotics.

The case today, however, stands out from the rest. This man has been accused of the most horrid of crimes. Worse, there seems to be no motivation for the brutal attack.  He claims to have no name...and admits to committing this crime so he can meet Lilly.  The strange claims don't end there.  At over two centuries old, he claims to be the inspiration for the works of Mary Shelley, Robert Louis Stevenson, and Bram Stoker.  Finally, the most unbelievable of claims: he reports that he is Lilly's father.

Putting everything on hold, risking her own life and career, Lilly pursue this monster in an attempt to answer questions that have riddled her mind all these years.

Don’t you love it when you discover a book that so perfectly matches your need at the moment? This book most certainly did for me.  It’s dark, it’s chilling; the cover serves as the perfect sneak peek into what you’ll experience inside.  Lilly is the perfect horror protagonist; you’ll be screaming for her to run away from the horror but instead she’s running toward it, headstrong.

I thought it to be a brilliant nod to the classic horror greats, while adding some modern twists and a unique spin on the vampire lore.  I devoured (pun intended) this one, reading at every moment I had the time.  Andrew Pyper is a horror great, an author whose work you should sample if you haven’t had the chance already.  Highly, highly recommended.

Posted in Horror, Review, Supernatural, Thriller | 1 Comment

Summer Book Preview: June 2017, Part III

It’s time to wrap up my most anticipated books of June series!  What a list so far, right? You can check out Part I and Part II as well! Following are the books publishing the last few weeks of June!

Here and Gone by Haylen Beck (June 20):

A compelling, impossible-to-put-down thriller about a mother’s desperate fight to recover her stolen children from corrupt authorities, sure to appeal to readers of The Widow and Defending Jacob

Here and Gone is a gripping, wonderfully tense suspense thriller. It begins with a mother fleeing through Arizona with her kids in tow, trying to escape an abusive marriage. When she’s pulled over by an unsettling local sheriff, things soon go awry and she is taken into custody. Only when she gets to the station, her kids are gone. And then the cops start saying they never saw any kids with her, that if they’re gone than she must have done something to them. Meanwhile, halfway across the country, a man hears the frenzied news reports about the missing kids, which are eerily similar to events in his own past. As the clock ticks down on the search for the lost children, he too is drawn into the desperate fight for their return.

Ok, if that summary doesn’t grab you, this detail might: Haylen Beck is a pseudonym of a well-known, award winning crime fiction author. Color me intrigued!

 

 

The Underground River by Martha Conway (June 20):

Set aboard a nineteenth century riverboat theater, this is the moving, page-turning story of a charmingly frank and naive seamstress who is blackmailed into saving runaways on the Underground Railroad, jeopardizing her freedom, her livelihood, and a new love.

It’s 1838, and May Bedloe works as a seamstress for her cousin, the famous actress Comfort Vertue—until their steamboat sinks on the Ohio River. Though they both survive, both must find new employment. Comfort is hired to give lectures by noted abolitionist, Flora Howard, and May finds work on a small flatboat, Hugo and Helena’s Floating Theatre, as it cruises the border between the northern states and the southern slave-holding states.

May becomes indispensable to Hugo and his troupe, and all goes well until she sees her cousin again. Comfort and Mrs. Howard are also traveling down the Ohio River, speaking out against slavery at the many riverside towns. May owes Mrs. Howard a debt she cannot repay, and Mrs. Howard uses the opportunity to enlist May in her network of shadowy characters who ferry babies given up by their slave mothers across the river to freedom. Lying has never come easy to May, but now she is compelled to break the law, deceive all her new-found friends, and deflect the rising suspicions of Dr. Early who captures runaways and sells them back to their southern masters.

As May’s secrets become more tangled and harder to keep, the Floating Theatre readies for its biggest performance yet. May’s predicament could mean doom for all her friends on board, including her beloved Hugo, unless she can figure out a way to trap those who know her best.

Quite the intriguing premise, yes? I was first introduced to this author’s work through her book Whistling Past the Graveyard. I’m very interested to read this most recent title!

 

 

 

The Sisters Chase by Sarah Healy (June 27):

A gripping novel about two sisters who are left homeless by their mother’s death and the lengths the fierce older sister will go to protect her beloved young charge.

The hardscrabble Chase women—Mary, Hannah, and their mother Diane—have been eking out a living running a tiny seaside motel that has been in the family for generations, inviting trouble into their lives for just as long. Eighteen-year-old Mary Chase is a force of nature: passionate, beautiful, and free-spirited. Her much younger sister, Hannah, whom Mary affectionately calls “Bunny,” is imaginative, her head full of the stories of princesses and adventures that Mary tells to give her a safe emotional place in the middle of their troubled world.

But when Diane dies in a car accident, Mary discovers the motel is worth less than the back taxes they owe. With few options, Mary’s finely tuned instincts for survival kick in. As the sisters begin a cross-country journey in search of a better life, she will stop at nothing to protect Hannah. But Mary wants to protect herself, too, for the secrets she promised she would never tell—but now may be forced to reveal—hold the weight of unbearable loss. Vivid and suspenseful, The Sisters Chase is a whirlwind page-turner about the extreme lengths one family will go to find—and hold onto—love.

I’ve heard quite a bit of buzz about this one. You know me and family secrets. Mention that and I’m sold!

 

 

 

 


The Confusion of Languages by Siobhan Fallon (June 27):

I’ll just read a little bit, I tell myself. And really, why shouldn’t I?

Both Cassie Hugo and Margaret Brickshaw dutifully followed their soldier husbands to the US Embassy in Jordan, but that’s about all the women have in common. After two years, Cassie’s an expert on the rules of the Middle East. For newly arrived Margaret, the move is a chance to see the world and explore. Against the odds the two strike up a friendship, until their husbands deploy and Cassie senses her new friend pulling away.

So when a fender-bender supposedly sends Margaret to the local police station, Cassie remains alone in the Brickshaw apartment to watch over Margaret’s toddler son. But with Margaret missing for hours Cassie becomes bored and soon frustrated, tired of being left behind while Margaret adventures. Then she discovers her friend’s journal. Where could Margaret be? Could her diary reveal the secrets that have come between them?

Written with stunning prose and powerful emotional insight, here is a story of two unforgettable women and the choices each will make in friendship, in marriage, and in love. The Confusion of Languages offers a poignant glimpse into the private lives of husbands, wives, and American military families living overseas.

I first discovered Siobhan’s work after the release of her previous title You Know When the Men Are Gone.  She’s a truly talented writer, capturing the essence of military family life that many of us are ignorant to, giving a voice to a demographic that often goes unnoticed. 

 

 

Modern Gods by Nick Laird (June 27):

An award-winning author who writes with “a wonderfully original and limber voice” (The New York Times)—a powerful, thought-provoking novel about two sisters who must reclaim themselves after their lives are dramatically upended

Alison Donnelly has suffered for love. Still stuck in the small Northern Irish town where she was born, working for her father’s real estate agency, she hopes to pick up the pieces and get her life back together. Her sister Liz, a fiercely independent college professor who lives in New York City, is about to return to Ulster for Alison’s second wedding, before heading to an island off the coast of Papua New Guinea to make a TV show about the world’s newest religion.

Both sisters’ lives are about to be shaken apart. Alison wakes up the day after her wedding to find that her new husband has a past neither of them can escape. In a rainforest on the other side of the planet, Liz finds herself becoming increasingly entangled in the eerie, charged world of Belef, the subject of her show, a charismatic middle-aged woman who is the leader of a cargo cult.

As Modern Gods ingeniously interweaves the stories of Liz and Alison, it becomes clear that both sisters must learn how to negotiate with the past, with the sins of fanaticism, and decide just what the living owe to the dead. Laird’s brave, innovative novel charts the intimacies and disappointments of a family trying to hold itself together, and the repercussions of history and faith.

I don’t quite recall how I came across this one, but so many aspects of it sound so fascinating to me: secret pasts, cults.  Hello, this sounds pretty amazing.

 

 

 

 

The Child by Fiona Barton (June 27):

As an old house is demolished in a gentrifying section of London, a workman discovers a tiny skeleton, buried for years. For journalist Kate Waters, it’s a story that deserves attention. She cobbles together a piece for her newspaper, but she’s at a loss for answers. As Kate investigates, she unearths connections to a crime that rocked the city decades earlier. A newborn baby was stolen from the maternity ward in a local hospital and was never found.

But there is more to the story, and Kate is drawn—house by house—into the pasts of the people who once lived in this neighborhood that has given up its greatest mystery. And she soon finds herself the keeper of unexpected secrets that erupt in the lives of three women—and torn between what she can and cannot tell…

If you are a fan of psychological thrillers and haven’t read Barton’s work, you are missing out. I devoured her previous book The Widow.  So chilling, in the best of ways!

 

 

There you have it! This concludes my most-anticipated books of June! Did I miss out on any?

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Summer Book Preview: June 2017, Part II

Last week, I shared the first part of my most anticipated books of June. Now that your wallet has recovered, how about some more? Following are titles releasing the second week of June!

 

Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore by Matthew Sullivan (June 13):

When a bookshop patron commits suicide, his favorite store clerk must unravel the puzzle he left behind in this fiendishly clever debut novel from an award-winning short story writer.

Lydia Smith lives her life hiding in plain sight. A clerk at the Bright Ideas bookstore, she keeps a meticulously crafted existence among her beloved books, eccentric colleagues, and the BookFrogs—the lost and lonely regulars who spend every day marauding the store’s overwhelmed shelves.

But when Joey Molina, a young, beguiling BookFrog, kills himself in the bookstore’s upper room, Lydia’s life comes unglued. Always Joey’s favorite bookseller, Lydia has been bequeathed his meager worldly possessions. Trinkets and books; the detritus of a lonely, uncared for man. But when Lydia flips through his books she finds them defaced in ways both disturbing and inexplicable. They reveal the psyche of a young man on the verge of an emotional reckoning. And they seem to contain a hidden message. What did Joey know? And what does it have to do with Lydia?

As Lydia untangles the mystery of Joey’s suicide, she unearths a long buried memory from her own violent childhood. Details from that one bloody night begin to circle back. Her distant father returns to the fold, along with an obsessive local cop, and the Hammerman, a murderer who came into Lydia’s life long ago and, as she soon discovers, never completely left. Bedazzling, addictive, and wildly clever, Midnight at the Bright Ideas Bookstore is a heart-pounding mystery that perfectly captures the intellect and eccentricity of the bookstore milieu and will keep you guessing until the very last page.

Everything about this book has my interest! Solving a mystery of a suicide, buried childhood secrets, all set in a bookstore!? SOLD!

 

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid (June 13):

Aging and reclusive Hollywood movie icon Evelyn Hugo is finally ready to tell the truth about her glamorous and scandalous life. But when she chooses unknown magazine reporter Monique Grant for the job, no one in the journalism community is more astounded than Monique herself. Why her? Why now?

Monique is not exactly on top of the world. Her husband, David, has left her, and her career has stagnated. Regardless of why Evelyn has chosen her to write her biography, Monique is determined to use this opportunity to jumpstart her career.

Summoned to Evelyn’s Upper East Side apartment, Monique listens as Evelyn unfurls her story: from making her way to Los Angeles in the 1950s to her decision to leave show business in the late 80s, and, of course, the seven husbands along the way. As Evelyn’s life unfolds—revealing a ruthless ambition, an unexpected friendship, and a great forbidden love—Monique begins to feel a very a real connection to the actress. But as Evelyn’s story catches up with the present, it becomes clear that her life intersects with Monique’s own in tragic and irreversible ways.

Written with Reid’s signature talent for “creating complex, likable characters” (Real Simple), this is a fascinating journey through the splendor of Old Hollywood into the harsh realities of the present day as two women struggle with what it means—and what it takes—to face the truth.

Not my typical read, but perhaps that’s why I’m so drawn to it!

 

 

 

The Space Between the Stars by Anne Corlett (June 13): 

All Jamie Allenby ever wanted was space. Even though she wasn’t forced to emigrate from Earth, she willingly left the overpopulated, claustrophobic planet. And when a long relationship devolved into silence and suffocating sadness, she found work on a frontier world on the edges of civilization. Then the virus hit…

Now Jamie finds herself dreadfully alone, with all that’s left of the dead. Until a garbled message from Earth gives her hope that someone from her past might still be alive.

Soon Jamie finds other survivors. And their ragtag group will travel through the vast reaches of space, drawn to the promise of a new beginning on Earth. But their dream will pit them against those desperately clinging to the old ways. And Jamie’s own journey home will help her close the distance between who she has become and who she is meant to be…

Doesn’t this one sound fascinating!? It’s been sitting on my desk for a few weeks now, begging for my attention.

 

The Changeling by Victor Lavalle (June 13):

Apollo Kagwa has had strange dreams that have haunted him since childhood. An antiquarian book dealer with a business called Improbabilia, he is just beginning to settle into his new life as a committed and involved father, unlike his own father who abandoned him, when his wife Emma begins acting strange. Disconnected and uninterested in their new baby boy, Emma at first seems to be exhibiting all the signs of post-partum depression, but it quickly becomes clear that her troubles go far beyond that. Before Apollo can do anything to help, Emma commits a horrific act—beyond any parent’s comprehension—and vanishes, seemingly into thin air. Thus begins Apollo’s odyssey through a world he only thought he understood to find a wife and child who are nothing like he’d imagined. His quest begins when he meets a mysterious stranger who claims to have information about Emma’s whereabouts. Apollo then begins a journey that takes him to a forgotten island in the East River of New York City, a graveyard full of secrets, a forest in Queens where immigrant legends still live, and finally back to a place he thought he had lost forever. This dizzying tale is ultimately a story about family and the unfathomable secrets of the people we love.

I’m already a fan of Lavalle’s work; the premise of this one intrigues me to no end!

 

The Lost Letter by Jillian Cantor (June 13):

Austria, 1938. Kristoff is a young apprentice to a master Jewish stamp engraver. When his teacher disappears during Kristallnacht, Kristoff finds himself working to engrave stamps for the Germans, and simultaneously working alongside Elena, his beloved teacher’s fiery daughter, and with the Austrian resistance to send underground messages and forge papers. As he falls for Elena amidst the brutal chaos of war, Kristoff must find a way to save her, and himself.

Los Angeles, 1989. Katie Nelson’s father is going into a nursing home and while cleaning out her house and life after a divorce, she comes across her father’s stamp collection. When an appraiser, Benjamin, finds an unusual Austrian WWII stamp placed on an old love letter as he goes through her dad’s collection, Katie and Benjamin are sent on a journey together that will uncover a story of passion and tragedy spanning decades and continents, behind the just fallen Berlin Wall.

A beautiful, poignant and devastating novel, The Lost Letter shows the lasting power of love.

Historical fiction has always been one of my favorite genres, and this particular era has a special place in my heart.

 

Do any of these capture your attention?

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Summer Book Preview: June 2017

It seems that life has once again taken over my reading time. I’m hoping to rectify that shortly.  That said, my crazy schedule hasn’t stopped me from keeping an eye out for upcoming titles that have caught my attention!

Following are those titles releasing the first week in June that I can’t wait to read.  I’m hoping by announcing them a few weeks in advance you can pre-order or get a hold in at the library!

You’ll Never Know, Dear by Hallie Ephron (June 6): 

Seven-year-old Lissie Steger and her four-year-old sister Janey were playing with their porcelain dolls in the front yard when an adorable puppy scampered by. Eager to pet the pretty dog, Lissie chased after the pup as it ran down the street. When she returned to the yard, Janey’s precious doll was gone . . . and so was Janey.

Forty years after Janey went missing, Lissie—now a mother with a college-age daughter of her own—still blames herself for what happened. Every year on the anniversary of her sister’s disappearance, their mother, Miss Sorrel, places a classified ad in the local paper with a picture of the toy Janey had with her that day—a one-of-a-kind porcelain doll—offering a generous cash reward for its return. For years, there’s been no response. But this year, the doll came home.

It is the first clue in a decades-old mystery that is about to turn into something far more sinister—endangering Lissie and the lives of her mother and daughter as well. Someone knows the truth about what happened all those years ago, and is desperate to keep it hidden.

This sounds just chilling enough to capture my attention, despite all the distractions life brings!

 

 


Do Not Become Alarmed by Maile Meloy (June 6):

When Liv and Nora decide to take their families on a holiday cruise, everyone is thrilled. The ship’s comforts and possibilities seem infinite. The children—two eleven-year-olds, an eight-year-old, and a six-year-old—love the nonstop buffet and the independence they have at the Kids’ Club. But when they all go ashore in beautiful Central America, a series of minor misfortunes leads the families farther and farther from the ship’s safety. One minute the children are there, and the next they’re gone.

What follows is a riveting, revealing story told from the perspectives of the adults and the children, as the once-happy parents—now turning on one another and blaming themselves—try to recover their children and their lives.

Celebrated for her ability to write vivid, spare, moving fiction, Maile Meloy shows how quickly the life we count on can fall away, and how a crisis changes everyone’s priorities. The fast-paced, gripping plot of Do Not Become Alarmed carries with it an insightful, provocative examination of privilege, race, guilt, envy, the dilemmas of modern parenthood, and the challenge of living up to our own expectations.

I’m kind of on the fence about this one; typically I shy away from books involving child abductions (gulp).  Yet, something about this one is drawing me to it!

 

 

Grief Cottage by Gail Godwin (June 6): 

After his mother’s death, eleven-year-old Marcus is sent to live on a small South Carolina island with his great aunt, a reclusive painter with a haunted past. Aunt Charlotte, otherwise a woman of few words, points out a ruined cottage, telling Marcus she had visited it regularly after she’d moved there thirty years ago because it matched the ruin of her own life. Eventually she was inspired to take up painting so she could capture its utter desolation.
The islanders call it “Grief Cottage,” because a boy and his parents disappeared from it during a hurricane fifty years before. Their bodies were never found and the cottage has stood empty ever since. During his lonely hours while Aunt Charlotte is in her studio painting and keeping her demons at bay, Marcus visits the cottage daily, building up his courage by coming ever closer, even after the ghost of the boy who died seems to reveal himself. Full of curiosity and open to the unfamiliar and uncanny given the recent upending of his life, he courts the ghost boy, never certain whether the ghost is friendly or follows some sinister agenda.

Grief Cottage is the best sort of ghost story, but it is far more than that—an investigation of grief, remorse, and the memories that haunt us. The power and beauty of this artful novel wash over the reader like the waves on a South Carolina beach.

Everything about this book is calling to me! The premise, the cover. Oooh, I must read this one!

 

The Gypsy Moth Summer by Julia Fierro (June 6):

It is the summer of 1992 and a gypsy moth invasion blankets Avalon Island, an islet off the coast of Long Island. Leslie Day Marshall—only daughter of Avalon’s most prominent family—returns to live in “The Castle,” the island’s grandest estate. Leslie’s husband Jules is African-American, and their children biracial, and islanders from both sides of the tracks form fast and dangerous opinions about the new arrivals.

Maddie Pencott LaRosa straddles those tracks: a teen queen with roots in the tony precincts of East Avalon and the crowded working class corner of West Avalon, home to Grudder Aviation factory, the island’s bread-and-butter. Maddie falls in love with Brooks, Leslie’s and Jules’ son, and that love feels as urgent to Maddie as the questions about the new and deadly cancers showing up across the island.

Vivid with young lovers, gangs of anxious outsiders; a plotting aged matriarch, a demented military patriarch; and a troubled young boy, The Gypsy Moth Summer is about love, gaps in understanding, and the struggle to connect: within families; among friends; between neighbors and entire generations.

I’m dying to read this!! I adored Fierro’s previous title, Cutting Teeth and cannot wait to get my hands on this one!

 

That covers the first week of June! Come back for more June releases!

 

 

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Review: Skitter by Ezekiel Boone

Review: Skitter by Ezekiel BooneSkitter by Ezekiel Boone
Also by this author: The Hatching
Published by Simon and Schuster on May 2, 2017
Genres: Apocalyptic & Post-Apocalyptic, Fiction, Horror, Science Fiction, Suspense, Thrillers
Pages: 352
Format: ARC
After a species of dormant spiders crawled out from the far depths of the Earth, millions of people across the planet are dead.  Half of China was decimated by a nuclear bomb they dropped on their own territory. Countless other cities were overwhelmed with swarms of the flesh-eating spiders. Suddenly the spiders begin to die off, hundreds upon thousands at a time.

Everyone believes the attack has come to an end.  The only evidence of the attacks are the unhatched egg sacs left behind.  Egg sacs that eventually hatch, unleashing a generation of spiders more vicious than before.

The President of the United States is corned into action; does she sacrifice hundreds of thousands of citizens if it means protecting the rest of the country?

I’m going to keep this portion of the review short. Skitter is the second in The Hatching trilogy.  There’s not much that can be discussed without revealing too much, particularly if readers have yet to start the series.

While it may seem that it has the curse of the “second book in a trilogy” syndrome in that it serves as a bridge from the first book to the last, it does provide a glimpse at how the characters are responding to the situation, how they have been forced into action to deal with an unthinkable attack. For that reason, I wouldn’t recommend skipping over this one; it does have character development that will prove valuable when the final book is released.  Don’t get me wrong; this is just as heart-pounding and intense as the previous book.  I read it during the readathon, tearing through the entire book in just over an hour.  It’s chilling, it’s terrifying. It will have you screaming in terror at the sight of any spider (if you don’t do this already)!

All in all, an enjoyable and captivating read. I can’t wait for the final book in the trilogy!

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Review: Ararat by Christopher Golden

I received this book for free from personal copy in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Review: Ararat by Christopher GoldenArarat by Christopher Golden
Published by St. Martin's Press on April 18, 2017
Genres: Fiction, Horror, Supernatural, Thrillers
Pages: 320
Format: Hardcover
Source: personal copy
An earthquake on Mount Ararat in Turkey reveals a hidden chamber.  Upon exploration, a band of researches discover what they believe to be Noah's Ark, buried within the mountain itself.  A team of researchers, scholars, government officials and religious representatives quickly descend into the cave.

Beyond the remnants of the ark and it's passengers, they also discover a foreboding stowaway.  It is soon relevant they have discovered something far more than a religious relic, but an evil, dark and deadly, prisoner for centuries within the rubble, now free.

Christopher Golden excels at crafting the most chilling horror reads. I devoured his previous book, Snowblind, and this most recent novel shared the same fate.

Golden uses the setting, in both cases a frigid, treacherous blizzard, as a character within itself. In this case, a blizzard holds this team hostage in a cavern full of pure and murderous evil, but then also provides a cover for the killer, hiding evidence until it is too late.

Additionally, the characters the author crafts are completely flawed, thrown into this high-stress, deadly situation and forced to fend for themselves. This adds to the tension, fuels the evil that resides within the cavern.

Golden’s horror novels are a slow burn…the embers start small but gain in intensity and strength.  Though over 300 pages, I read this in just one sitting.  I’m still amazed and it’s been a week since I finished the read.  Golden is an author you’ll want to add to your favorites list, guaranteed.  Highly, highly recommended.

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Dewey’s 24 Hour Readathon: April 2017 Wrap-Up Post

dewey

 

Egads!  This has been sitting in my drafts for days.  I completely forgot to schedule it to go live!

All in all, I think this was a very successful readathon!  I was able to keep up with regularly scheduled activities, like Book Store day, treat my husband to lunch, and more.

 

That said, here are the stats:

Books Read:

Skitter by Ezekiel Boone
ARARAT by Christopher Golden
Enchanted Islands by Allison Amend
The Sun is Also a Star by Nicola Yoon

Book Started:

The Book of Polly by Kathy Hepinstall

Total Pages Read:  1372

Total Time Read: Nine Hours & Twenty Minutes

 

How was your read-a-thon?

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Month in Review: April 2017

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<Insert obligatory statement about how I cannot believe it’s already May>.  It’s true! Where has the time gone!?

I’m thrilled to say that I think I finally have my reading groove back.  I read some pretty outstanding books in April (FINALLY):

 

Favorite book of the month:

Impossible to choose just one, but the books read this month that moved me the most?  American War and The Hate U Give.

What about you? How was your reading month?

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Dewey’s April 2017 #Readathon Mini Challenge: Create a Story in Your Stack

I don’t know about you, but selecting the books to read during the #readathon is the most daunting, yet also exciting, task!  What makes it even more fun is when you add another creative step to the task: creating a story or haiku in your book stack.

For this challenge, using only the books in your readathon stack, create a story, poem, or haiku!  I’m not one to pose challenges without doing it myself, so here are my contributions!

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Sleeping Bones,
A Twist of the Knife,
Carve the Mark

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Enchanted Islands,
The Spider and the Fly,
Skitter

Include a link to your challenge post (be it on a blog, Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr) in the link up below!

I’ll randomly pick one winner at the end of the readathon!  The winner has a choice of two prizes!  I’m a LuLaRoe consultant, so I’d love to give away one free pair of leggings!  They really are the best reading attire!  If that prize doesn’t suit your fancy, you can choose instead one book of your choice, up to $25!

Have fun! Be creative!


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Dewey’s April 2017 24-Hour Read-a-thon Update Post

dewey

 

It’s here, it’s here! Dewey’s 24-Hour read-a-thon!

This shall serve as my update post for the read-a-thon!  I’ll be updating sporadically through the day with number of books read, pages read, etc!

I’m starting off the morning with a nice blueberry/strawberry muffin baked by my boys!  Stay tuned!  I’ll be back in a few hours with an update!

Update #1: 2:30 PM
Update#2: 4:30 PM
Update#3: 6:55 PM
Update #4: 9:55 PM

 

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